<p>Phone hackers in the US are bilking unsuspecting customers of billions of dollars every year through a scheme that was used to finance the 2008 Mumbai terrorist attacks, according to the New York Times.</p>.<p><br />In 2011, the Federal Bureau of Investigation and police in the Philippines arrested four men who used the scheme to make $2 million in fraudulent calls.<br /><br />The revenue was directed to a Saudi Arabian militant group that US officials cited by the influential daily believe financed the 2008 Mumbai terrorist bombings.<br /><br />The swindle, which on the web is easier to pull off and more profitable, affects mostly small businesses and cost victims $4.73 billion globally last year.<br /><br />That was up nearly $1 billion from 2011, the Times said citing the Communications Fraud Control Association, an industry group financed by carriers and law-enforcement agencies to tackle communications fraud.<br /><br />But catching the criminals is difficult because the crime can cross as many as three jurisdictions, the Times said.<br /><br />In one case cited by the daily, hackers targeted the phone system of an architecture firm in Georgia and routed $166,000 worth of calls to premium-rate telephone numbers in Gambia, Somalia and the Maldives in a single weekend last March.<br /><br />According to telecommunications fraud experts cited by the Times, hackers sign up to lease premium-rate phone numbers, often used for sexual chat or psychic lines and then break into a business's phone system to make calls through it to their premium number.<br /><br />With high-speed computers, they can make hundreds of calls simultaneously, forwarding as many as 220 minutes' worth of phone calls a minute to the pay line.<br />The hacker gets a cut of the charges, typically delivered through a Western Union, MoneyGram or wire transfer.<br /><br />In part because the plan is so profitable, premium rate number resellers are multiplying rapidly, the Times said.</p>
<p>Phone hackers in the US are bilking unsuspecting customers of billions of dollars every year through a scheme that was used to finance the 2008 Mumbai terrorist attacks, according to the New York Times.</p>.<p><br />In 2011, the Federal Bureau of Investigation and police in the Philippines arrested four men who used the scheme to make $2 million in fraudulent calls.<br /><br />The revenue was directed to a Saudi Arabian militant group that US officials cited by the influential daily believe financed the 2008 Mumbai terrorist bombings.<br /><br />The swindle, which on the web is easier to pull off and more profitable, affects mostly small businesses and cost victims $4.73 billion globally last year.<br /><br />That was up nearly $1 billion from 2011, the Times said citing the Communications Fraud Control Association, an industry group financed by carriers and law-enforcement agencies to tackle communications fraud.<br /><br />But catching the criminals is difficult because the crime can cross as many as three jurisdictions, the Times said.<br /><br />In one case cited by the daily, hackers targeted the phone system of an architecture firm in Georgia and routed $166,000 worth of calls to premium-rate telephone numbers in Gambia, Somalia and the Maldives in a single weekend last March.<br /><br />According to telecommunications fraud experts cited by the Times, hackers sign up to lease premium-rate phone numbers, often used for sexual chat or psychic lines and then break into a business's phone system to make calls through it to their premium number.<br /><br />With high-speed computers, they can make hundreds of calls simultaneously, forwarding as many as 220 minutes' worth of phone calls a minute to the pay line.<br />The hacker gets a cut of the charges, typically delivered through a Western Union, MoneyGram or wire transfer.<br /><br />In part because the plan is so profitable, premium rate number resellers are multiplying rapidly, the Times said.</p>